Guest guest Posted January 10, 2010 Report Share Posted January 10, 2010 I found this alos very interesting Ralph Giarnella MD Southington Ct USA ECG Cost-Effective for Screening Student Athletes By Crystal Phend, Senior Staff Writer, MedPage Today Published: November 16, 2009 Reviewed by Dori F. Zaleznik, MD; Associate Clinical Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston and Dorothy Caputo, MA, RN, BC-ADM, CDE, Nurse Planner Action Points * Note that the American Heart Association and American College of Cardiology guidelines suggest ECG as optional for preparticipation screening of student athletes. * Note that this study was published as an abstract and presented at a conference. These data and conclusions should be considered preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed journal. ORLANDO -- Cost issues should no longer keep electrocardiograms out of most schools' efforts to screen student athletes for potentially fatal heart problems, researchers said here. Recent declines in the price of ECG machines mean that students can be screened for a cost of less than $3 each after an initial investment of under $500 per school, according to a study led by DeBauche, MD, of Cypress Cardiology in Cypress, Texas. Addition of 12-lead ECG to screening would cost just $300 per year of life saved, DeBauche's group reported at the American Heart Association meeting. This price was so far below the typical cost-effectiveness threshold of $50,000 per life-year that there should no longer be any question about adopting ECG in screening, DeBauche said. His group set up a program to add a one-time ECG for every student participating in competitive sports in their suburban Houston school district. Although high school football is enormously popular in Texas where games can draw tens of thousands of spectators, like most other states, Texas requires only a perfunctory physical exam and completion of a questionnaire on possible symptoms and family cardiac history for participation. ECG is universally acknowledged as more likely to identify serious cardiac problems, and it has been adopted as an international standard for screening in much of the world. One prior study from a region in Italy, which pioneered nationwide screening of athletes with ECG in the late 1990s, revealed a 90% drop in sudden cardiac events after the screening program began. (See National Screening Slows Sudden Cardiac Deaths Among Athletes) But ECG has not been advocated in national guidelines for the U.S. in large part because of the cost, Zipes, MD, of Indiana University and a past president of the American College of Cardiology, noted. " The U.S. is behind the times when it comes to screening athletes, " he said, calling current efforts in much of the country woefully inadequate. Scattered U.S. programs have adopted ECG following the Italian model. " Everybody agrees, yes, it should be done, but it's optional because we don't think we can afford, on a national level, a mandated program, " DeBauche said. At current reimbursement levels, sending all student athletes to the hospital or a physician's office for an ECG at about $100 each would cost over an estimated $1 billion, DeBauche said. The program his group designed, though, would cost under $2 million to screen all 200,000 U.S. athletes in the ninth grade, which is an optimal age to catch problems -- before high school sports but after onset of puberty, he said. The program included providing laptop-based ECG machines for each of 10 high schools in the school district. Athletic trainers and other school employees were trained to apply the ECG leads according to a diagram, take the ECG with the push of a button, and forward the HIPAA compliant electronic file to DeBauche's team for interpretation. Of the 2,057 freshmen screened, 9% (186 students) had an abnormal ECG result and were advised to set up a consultation, get a screening echocardiogram for diagnosis, or both. Only 0.6% had a serious enough abnormality to eliminate them from participation in competitive sports. Among the 173 who accepted further examination for their abnormal findings, the diagnoses included: * Eight cases of Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome * 23 cases of left ventricular hypertrophy * Three cases of moderate severity mitral valve regurgitation * Six cases of right ventricular pulmonary hypertension * One case of cardiomyopathy * 17 cases of mitral valve prolapse. One student was found to have noncompaction cardiomyopathy, a clearly life-threatening condition that subsequently led to implantation of a defibrillator and waitlisting for a heart transplant. A second case of aortic coartication and the right ventricular abnormalities " certainly had major clinical significance, " the researchers said. An echocardiogram to follow-up on abnormal cases could be carried out by commercial screening firms specializing in large numbers of relatively easy studies and reimbursed by all major insurers, DeBauche said. The ECG itself would cost only $0.50 per ECG for electrodes and about $2.00 for interpretation. " When you find something this good you should do it, " DeBauche said. Barry lin, PhD, of Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, Mich., agreed that this type of screening wouldn't necessarily need a clinical cardiologist since a nurse or other trained staff could administer the ECG. " It's a very simple test, " he said. The biggest costs involve setting up the infrastructure, Zipes added. " We're talking about the lives of youngsters, " he said. " If that were your son or daughter, you would want it done. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 10, 2010 Report Share Posted January 10, 2010 I thought mitral valve prolapse was a common condition, that doesn't disqualify an individual from sports. Giovanni Ciriani - West Hartford, CT - USA On Sun, Jan 10, 2010 at 11:37 AM, Ralph Giarnella <ragiarn@...> wrote: > > > I found this alos very interesting > Ralph Giarnella MD > Southington Ct USA > > ECG Cost-Effective for Screening Student Athletes > By Crystal Phend, Senior Staff Writer, MedPage Today > Published: November 16, 2009 > Reviewed by Dori F. Zaleznik, MD; Associate Clinical Professor of Medicine, > Harvard Medical School, Boston and > Dorothy Caputo, MA, RN, BC-ADM, CDE, Nurse Planner > > Action Points > > * Note that the American Heart Association and American College of > Cardiology guidelines suggest ECG as optional for preparticipation screening > of student athletes. > > * Note that this study was published as an abstract and presented at a > conference. These data and conclusions should be considered preliminary > until published in a peer-reviewed journal. > > ORLANDO -- Cost issues should no longer keep electrocardiograms out of most > schools' efforts to screen student athletes for potentially fatal heart > problems, researchers said here. > > Recent declines in the price of ECG machines mean that students can be > screened for a cost of less than $3 each after an initial investment of > under $500 per school, according to a study led by DeBauche, MD, of > Cypress Cardiology in Cypress, Texas. > > Addition of 12-lead ECG to screening would cost just $300 per year of life > saved, DeBauche's group reported at the American Heart Association meeting. > > This price was so far below the typical cost-effectiveness threshold of > $50,000 per life-year that there should no longer be any question about > adopting ECG in screening, DeBauche said. > > His group set up a program to add a one-time ECG for every student > participating in competitive sports in their suburban Houston school > district. > > Although high school football is enormously popular in Texas where games > can draw tens of thousands of spectators, like most other states, Texas > requires only a perfunctory physical exam and completion of a questionnaire > on possible symptoms and family cardiac history for participation. > > ECG is universally acknowledged as more likely to identify serious cardiac > problems, and it has been adopted as an international standard for screening > in much of the world. > > One prior study from a region in Italy, which pioneered nationwide > screening of athletes with ECG in the late 1990s, revealed a 90% drop in > sudden cardiac events after the screening program began. (See National > Screening Slows Sudden Cardiac Deaths Among Athletes) > > But ECG has not been advocated in national guidelines for the U.S. in large > part because of the cost, Zipes, MD, of Indiana University and a > past president of the American College of Cardiology, noted. > > " The U.S. is behind the times when it comes to screening athletes, " he > said, calling current efforts in much of the country woefully inadequate. > > Scattered U.S. programs have adopted ECG following the Italian model. > " Everybody agrees, yes, it should be done, but it's optional because we > don't think we can afford, on a national level, a mandated program, " > DeBauche said. > > At current reimbursement levels, sending all student athletes to the > hospital or a physician's office for an ECG at about $100 each would cost > over an estimated $1 billion, DeBauche said. > > The program his group designed, though, would cost under $2 million to > screen all 200,000 U.S. athletes in the ninth grade, which is an optimal age > to catch problems -- before high school sports but after onset of puberty, > he said. > > The program included providing laptop-based ECG machines for each of 10 > high schools in the school district. > > Athletic trainers and other school employees were trained to apply the ECG > leads according to a diagram, take the ECG with the push of a button, and > forward the HIPAA compliant electronic file to DeBauche's team for > interpretation. > > Of the 2,057 freshmen screened, 9% (186 students) had an abnormal ECG > result and were advised to set up a consultation, get a screening > echocardiogram for diagnosis, or both. > > Only 0.6% had a serious enough abnormality to eliminate them from > participation in competitive sports. > > Among the 173 who accepted further examination for their abnormal findings, > the diagnoses included: > > * Eight cases of Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome > * 23 cases of left ventricular hypertrophy > * Three cases of moderate severity mitral valve regurgitation > * Six cases of right ventricular pulmonary hypertension > * One case of cardiomyopathy > * 17 cases of mitral valve prolapse. > > One student was found to have noncompaction cardiomyopathy, a clearly > life-threatening condition that subsequently led to implantation of a > defibrillator and waitlisting for a heart transplant. > > A second case of aortic coartication and the right ventricular > abnormalities " certainly had major clinical significance, " the researchers > said. > > An echocardiogram to follow-up on abnormal cases could be carried out by > commercial screening firms specializing in large numbers of relatively easy > studies and reimbursed by all major insurers, DeBauche said. > > The ECG itself would cost only $0.50 per ECG for electrodes and about $2.00 > for interpretation. > > " When you find something this good you should do it, " DeBauche said. > > Barry lin, PhD, of Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, Mich., > agreed that this type of screening wouldn't necessarily need a clinical > cardiologist since a nurse or other trained staff could administer the ECG. > > " It's a very simple test, " he said. > > The biggest costs involve setting up the infrastructure, Zipes added. > > " We're talking about the lives of youngsters, " he said. " If that were your > son or daughter, you would want it done. " > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 10, 2010 Report Share Posted January 10, 2010 I thought mitral valve prolapse was a common condition, that doesn't disqualify an individual from sports. Giovanni Ciriani - West Hartford, CT - USA On Sun, Jan 10, 2010 at 11:37 AM, Ralph Giarnella <ragiarn@...> wrote: > > > I found this alos very interesting > Ralph Giarnella MD > Southington Ct USA > > ECG Cost-Effective for Screening Student Athletes > By Crystal Phend, Senior Staff Writer, MedPage Today > Published: November 16, 2009 > Reviewed by Dori F. Zaleznik, MD; Associate Clinical Professor of Medicine, > Harvard Medical School, Boston and > Dorothy Caputo, MA, RN, BC-ADM, CDE, Nurse Planner > > Action Points > > * Note that the American Heart Association and American College of > Cardiology guidelines suggest ECG as optional for preparticipation screening > of student athletes. > > * Note that this study was published as an abstract and presented at a > conference. These data and conclusions should be considered preliminary > until published in a peer-reviewed journal. > > ORLANDO -- Cost issues should no longer keep electrocardiograms out of most > schools' efforts to screen student athletes for potentially fatal heart > problems, researchers said here. > > Recent declines in the price of ECG machines mean that students can be > screened for a cost of less than $3 each after an initial investment of > under $500 per school, according to a study led by DeBauche, MD, of > Cypress Cardiology in Cypress, Texas. > > Addition of 12-lead ECG to screening would cost just $300 per year of life > saved, DeBauche's group reported at the American Heart Association meeting. > > This price was so far below the typical cost-effectiveness threshold of > $50,000 per life-year that there should no longer be any question about > adopting ECG in screening, DeBauche said. > > His group set up a program to add a one-time ECG for every student > participating in competitive sports in their suburban Houston school > district. > > Although high school football is enormously popular in Texas where games > can draw tens of thousands of spectators, like most other states, Texas > requires only a perfunctory physical exam and completion of a questionnaire > on possible symptoms and family cardiac history for participation. > > ECG is universally acknowledged as more likely to identify serious cardiac > problems, and it has been adopted as an international standard for screening > in much of the world. > > One prior study from a region in Italy, which pioneered nationwide > screening of athletes with ECG in the late 1990s, revealed a 90% drop in > sudden cardiac events after the screening program began. (See National > Screening Slows Sudden Cardiac Deaths Among Athletes) > > But ECG has not been advocated in national guidelines for the U.S. in large > part because of the cost, Zipes, MD, of Indiana University and a > past president of the American College of Cardiology, noted. > > " The U.S. is behind the times when it comes to screening athletes, " he > said, calling current efforts in much of the country woefully inadequate. > > Scattered U.S. programs have adopted ECG following the Italian model. > " Everybody agrees, yes, it should be done, but it's optional because we > don't think we can afford, on a national level, a mandated program, " > DeBauche said. > > At current reimbursement levels, sending all student athletes to the > hospital or a physician's office for an ECG at about $100 each would cost > over an estimated $1 billion, DeBauche said. > > The program his group designed, though, would cost under $2 million to > screen all 200,000 U.S. athletes in the ninth grade, which is an optimal age > to catch problems -- before high school sports but after onset of puberty, > he said. > > The program included providing laptop-based ECG machines for each of 10 > high schools in the school district. > > Athletic trainers and other school employees were trained to apply the ECG > leads according to a diagram, take the ECG with the push of a button, and > forward the HIPAA compliant electronic file to DeBauche's team for > interpretation. > > Of the 2,057 freshmen screened, 9% (186 students) had an abnormal ECG > result and were advised to set up a consultation, get a screening > echocardiogram for diagnosis, or both. > > Only 0.6% had a serious enough abnormality to eliminate them from > participation in competitive sports. > > Among the 173 who accepted further examination for their abnormal findings, > the diagnoses included: > > * Eight cases of Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome > * 23 cases of left ventricular hypertrophy > * Three cases of moderate severity mitral valve regurgitation > * Six cases of right ventricular pulmonary hypertension > * One case of cardiomyopathy > * 17 cases of mitral valve prolapse. > > One student was found to have noncompaction cardiomyopathy, a clearly > life-threatening condition that subsequently led to implantation of a > defibrillator and waitlisting for a heart transplant. > > A second case of aortic coartication and the right ventricular > abnormalities " certainly had major clinical significance, " the researchers > said. > > An echocardiogram to follow-up on abnormal cases could be carried out by > commercial screening firms specializing in large numbers of relatively easy > studies and reimbursed by all major insurers, DeBauche said. > > The ECG itself would cost only $0.50 per ECG for electrodes and about $2.00 > for interpretation. > > " When you find something this good you should do it, " DeBauche said. > > Barry lin, PhD, of Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, Mich., > agreed that this type of screening wouldn't necessarily need a clinical > cardiologist since a nurse or other trained staff could administer the ECG. > > " It's a very simple test, " he said. > > The biggest costs involve setting up the infrastructure, Zipes added. > > " We're talking about the lives of youngsters, " he said. " If that were your > son or daughter, you would want it done. " > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 10, 2010 Report Share Posted January 10, 2010 Yeah. It's fascinating that our ATHLETES at the college level are suffering from these problems. Imagine if you took a cross section of the rest of them? Either they're not making young people as well as they used to - or this is competely out of control in that age group?? (If we screened people in their 40's, would we come up with this many problems in athletic people??) Were people always this liable to have such heart conditions, particularly prime time athletes - all along? Is it that we're merely catching things people played entire pro careers with, without incident? What I wonder though is if this screening will eventually lead to lawsuits of " discrimination " for someone not getting their chance or scholarship - based only on this testing. Sometimes what institutions believe will save them money costs them more in the long run? The Phantom aka Schaefer, CMT/RMT, competing powerlifter Denver, Colorado, USA ================================= Re: ECG Cost-Effective for Screening Student Athletes I found this alos very interesting Ralph Giarnella MD Southington Ct USA ECG Cost-Effective for Screening Student Athletes By Crystal Phend, Senior Staff Writer, MedPage Today Published: November 16, 2009 Reviewed by Dori F. Zaleznik, MD; Associate Clinical Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston and Dorothy Caputo, MA, RN, BC-ADM, CDE, Nurse Planner Action Points * Note that the American Heart Association and American College of Cardiology guidelines suggest ECG as optional for preparticipation screening of student athletes. * Note that this study was published as an abstract and presented at a conference. These data and conclusions should be considered preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed journal. ORLANDO -- Cost issues should no longer keep electrocardiograms out of most schools' efforts to screen student athletes for potentially fatal heart problems, researchers said here. Recent declines in the price of ECG machines mean that students can be screened for a cost of less than $3 each after an initial investment of under $500 per school, according to a study led by DeBauche, MD, of Cypress Cardiology in Cypress, Texas. Addition of 12-lead ECG to screening would cost just $300 per year of life saved, DeBauche's group reported at the American Heart Association meeting. This price was so far below the typical cost-effectiveness threshold of $50,000 per life-year that there should no longer be any question about adopting ECG in screening, DeBauche said. His group set up a program to add a one-time ECG for every student participating in competitive sports in their suburban Houston school district. Although high school football is enormously popular in Texas where games can draw tens of thousands of spectators, like most other states, Texas requires only a perfunctory physical exam and completion of a questionnaire on possible symptoms and family cardiac history for participation. ECG is universally acknowledged as more likely to identify serious cardiac problems, and it has been adopted as an international standard for screening in much of the world. One prior study from a region in Italy, which pioneered nationwide screening of athletes with ECG in the late 1990s, revealed a 90% drop in sudden cardiac events after the screening program began. (See National Screening Slows Sudden Cardiac Deaths Among Athletes) But ECG has not been advocated in national guidelines for the U.S. in large part because of the cost, Zipes, MD, of Indiana University and a past president of the American College of Cardiology, noted. " The U.S. is behind the times when it comes to screening athletes, " he said, calling current efforts in much of the country woefully inadequate. Scattered U.S. programs have adopted ECG following the Italian model. " Everybody agrees, yes, it should be done, but it's optional because we don't think we can afford, on a national level, a mandated program, " DeBauche said. At current reimbursement levels, sending all student athletes to the hospital or a physician's office for an ECG at about $100 each would cost over an estimated $1 billion, DeBauche said. The program his group designed, though, would cost under $2 million to screen all 200,000 U.S. athletes in the ninth grade, which is an optimal age to catch problems -- before high school sports but after onset of puberty, he said. The program included providing laptop-based ECG machines for each of 10 high schools in the school district. Athletic trainers and other school employees were trained to apply the ECG leads according to a diagram, take the ECG with the push of a button, and forward the HIPAA compliant electronic file to DeBauche's team for interpretation. Of the 2,057 freshmen screened, 9% (186 students) had an abnormal ECG result and were advised to set up a consultation, get a screening echocardiogram for diagnosis, or both. Only 0.6% had a serious enough abnormality to eliminate them from participation in competitive sports. Among the 173 who accepted further examination for their abnormal findings, the diagnoses included: * Eight cases of Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome * 23 cases of left ventricular hypertrophy * Three cases of moderate severity mitral valve regurgitation * Six cases of right ventricular pulmonary hypertension * One case of cardiomyopathy * 17 cases of mitral valve prolapse. One student was found to have noncompaction cardiomyopathy, a clearly life-threatening condition that subsequently led to implantation of a defibrillator and waitlisting for a heart transplant. A second case of aortic coartication and the right ventricular abnormalities " certainly had major clinical significance, " the researchers said. An echocardiogram to follow-up on abnormal cases could be carried out by commercial screening firms specializing in large numbers of relatively easy studies and reimbursed by all major insurers, DeBauche said. The ECG itself would cost only $0.50 per ECG for electrodes and about $2.00 for interpretation. " When you find something this good you should do it, " DeBauche said. Barry lin, PhD, of Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, Mich., agreed that this type of screening wouldn't necessarily need a clinical cardiologist since a nurse or other trained staff could administer the ECG. " It's a very simple test, " he said. The biggest costs involve setting up the infrastructure, Zipes added. " We're talking about the lives of youngsters, " he said. " If that were your son or daughter, you would want it done. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 10, 2010 Report Share Posted January 10, 2010 Yeah. It's fascinating that our ATHLETES at the college level are suffering from these problems. Imagine if you took a cross section of the rest of them? Either they're not making young people as well as they used to - or this is competely out of control in that age group?? (If we screened people in their 40's, would we come up with this many problems in athletic people??) Were people always this liable to have such heart conditions, particularly prime time athletes - all along? Is it that we're merely catching things people played entire pro careers with, without incident? What I wonder though is if this screening will eventually lead to lawsuits of " discrimination " for someone not getting their chance or scholarship - based only on this testing. Sometimes what institutions believe will save them money costs them more in the long run? The Phantom aka Schaefer, CMT/RMT, competing powerlifter Denver, Colorado, USA ================================= Re: ECG Cost-Effective for Screening Student Athletes I found this alos very interesting Ralph Giarnella MD Southington Ct USA ECG Cost-Effective for Screening Student Athletes By Crystal Phend, Senior Staff Writer, MedPage Today Published: November 16, 2009 Reviewed by Dori F. Zaleznik, MD; Associate Clinical Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston and Dorothy Caputo, MA, RN, BC-ADM, CDE, Nurse Planner Action Points * Note that the American Heart Association and American College of Cardiology guidelines suggest ECG as optional for preparticipation screening of student athletes. * Note that this study was published as an abstract and presented at a conference. These data and conclusions should be considered preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed journal. ORLANDO -- Cost issues should no longer keep electrocardiograms out of most schools' efforts to screen student athletes for potentially fatal heart problems, researchers said here. Recent declines in the price of ECG machines mean that students can be screened for a cost of less than $3 each after an initial investment of under $500 per school, according to a study led by DeBauche, MD, of Cypress Cardiology in Cypress, Texas. Addition of 12-lead ECG to screening would cost just $300 per year of life saved, DeBauche's group reported at the American Heart Association meeting. This price was so far below the typical cost-effectiveness threshold of $50,000 per life-year that there should no longer be any question about adopting ECG in screening, DeBauche said. His group set up a program to add a one-time ECG for every student participating in competitive sports in their suburban Houston school district. Although high school football is enormously popular in Texas where games can draw tens of thousands of spectators, like most other states, Texas requires only a perfunctory physical exam and completion of a questionnaire on possible symptoms and family cardiac history for participation. ECG is universally acknowledged as more likely to identify serious cardiac problems, and it has been adopted as an international standard for screening in much of the world. One prior study from a region in Italy, which pioneered nationwide screening of athletes with ECG in the late 1990s, revealed a 90% drop in sudden cardiac events after the screening program began. (See National Screening Slows Sudden Cardiac Deaths Among Athletes) But ECG has not been advocated in national guidelines for the U.S. in large part because of the cost, Zipes, MD, of Indiana University and a past president of the American College of Cardiology, noted. " The U.S. is behind the times when it comes to screening athletes, " he said, calling current efforts in much of the country woefully inadequate. Scattered U.S. programs have adopted ECG following the Italian model. " Everybody agrees, yes, it should be done, but it's optional because we don't think we can afford, on a national level, a mandated program, " DeBauche said. At current reimbursement levels, sending all student athletes to the hospital or a physician's office for an ECG at about $100 each would cost over an estimated $1 billion, DeBauche said. The program his group designed, though, would cost under $2 million to screen all 200,000 U.S. athletes in the ninth grade, which is an optimal age to catch problems -- before high school sports but after onset of puberty, he said. The program included providing laptop-based ECG machines for each of 10 high schools in the school district. Athletic trainers and other school employees were trained to apply the ECG leads according to a diagram, take the ECG with the push of a button, and forward the HIPAA compliant electronic file to DeBauche's team for interpretation. Of the 2,057 freshmen screened, 9% (186 students) had an abnormal ECG result and were advised to set up a consultation, get a screening echocardiogram for diagnosis, or both. Only 0.6% had a serious enough abnormality to eliminate them from participation in competitive sports. Among the 173 who accepted further examination for their abnormal findings, the diagnoses included: * Eight cases of Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome * 23 cases of left ventricular hypertrophy * Three cases of moderate severity mitral valve regurgitation * Six cases of right ventricular pulmonary hypertension * One case of cardiomyopathy * 17 cases of mitral valve prolapse. One student was found to have noncompaction cardiomyopathy, a clearly life-threatening condition that subsequently led to implantation of a defibrillator and waitlisting for a heart transplant. A second case of aortic coartication and the right ventricular abnormalities " certainly had major clinical significance, " the researchers said. An echocardiogram to follow-up on abnormal cases could be carried out by commercial screening firms specializing in large numbers of relatively easy studies and reimbursed by all major insurers, DeBauche said. The ECG itself would cost only $0.50 per ECG for electrodes and about $2.00 for interpretation. " When you find something this good you should do it, " DeBauche said. Barry lin, PhD, of Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, Mich., agreed that this type of screening wouldn't necessarily need a clinical cardiologist since a nurse or other trained staff could administer the ECG. " It's a very simple test, " he said. The biggest costs involve setting up the infrastructure, Zipes added. " We're talking about the lives of youngsters, " he said. " If that were your son or daughter, you would want it done. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 11, 2010 Report Share Posted January 11, 2010 I don't believe the authors indicated that Mitral Valve Prolapse was an indication for disqulification. However Mitral Valve Prolapse is not totally benign. Some individuals may develop episodes of supraventricular tachycardia which can be very troublesome and they need to use beta blockers to prevent the episodes. Ralph Giarnella MD Southington Ct USA ________________________________ From: Giovanni Ciriani <Giovanni.Ciriani@...> Supertraining Sent: Sun, January 10, 2010 3:30:34 PM Subject: Re: ECG Cost-Effective for Screening Student Athletes I thought mitral valve prolapse was a common condition, that doesn't disqualify an individual from sports. Giovanni Ciriani - West Hartford, CT - USA On Sun, Jan 10, 2010 at 11:37 AM, Ralph Giarnella <ragiarn (DOT) com> wrote: > > > I found this alos very interesting > Ralph Giarnella MD > Southington Ct USA > > ECG Cost-Effective for Screening Student Athletes > By Crystal Phend, Senior Staff Writer, MedPage Today > Published: November 16, 2009 > Reviewed by Dori F. Zaleznik, MD; Associate Clinical Professor of Medicine, > Harvard Medical School, Boston and > Dorothy Caputo, MA, RN, BC-ADM, CDE, Nurse Planner > > Action Points > > * Note that the American Heart Association and American College of > Cardiology guidelines suggest ECG as optional for preparticipation screening > of student athletes. > > * Note that this study was published as an abstract and presented at a > conference. These data and conclusions should be considered preliminary > until published in a peer-reviewed journal. > > ORLANDO -- Cost issues should no longer keep electrocardiograms out of most > schools' efforts to screen student athletes for potentially fatal heart > problems, researchers said here. > > Recent declines in the price of ECG machines mean that students can be > screened for a cost of less than $3 each after an initial investment of > under $500 per school, according to a study led by DeBauche, MD, of > Cypress Cardiology in Cypress, Texas. > > Addition of 12-lead ECG to screening would cost just $300 per year of life > saved, DeBauche's group reported at the American Heart Association meeting. > > This price was so far below the typical cost-effectiveness threshold of > $50,000 per life-year that there should no longer be any question about > adopting ECG in screening, DeBauche said. > > His group set up a program to add a one-time ECG for every student > participating in competitive sports in their suburban Houston school > district. > > Although high school football is enormously popular in Texas where games > can draw tens of thousands of spectators, like most other states, Texas > requires only a perfunctory physical exam and completion of a questionnaire > on possible symptoms and family cardiac history for participation. > > ECG is universally acknowledged as more likely to identify serious cardiac > problems, and it has been adopted as an international standard for screening > in much of the world. > > One prior study from a region in Italy, which pioneered nationwide > screening of athletes with ECG in the late 1990s, revealed a 90% drop in > sudden cardiac events after the screening program began. (See National > Screening Slows Sudden Cardiac Deaths Among Athletes) > > But ECG has not been advocated in national guidelines for the U.S. in large > part because of the cost, Zipes, MD, of Indiana University and a > past president of the American College of Cardiology, noted. > > " The U.S. is behind the times when it comes to screening athletes, " he > said, calling current efforts in much of the country woefully inadequate. > > Scattered U.S. programs have adopted ECG following the Italian model. > " Everybody agrees, yes, it should be done, but it's optional because we > don't think we can afford, on a national level, a mandated program, " > DeBauche said. > > At current reimbursement levels, sending all student athletes to the > hospital or a physician's office for an ECG at about $100 each would cost > over an estimated $1 billion, DeBauche said. > > The program his group designed, though, would cost under $2 million to > screen all 200,000 U.S. athletes in the ninth grade, which is an optimal age > to catch problems -- before high school sports but after onset of puberty, > he said. > > The program included providing laptop-based ECG machines for each of 10 > high schools in the school district. > > Athletic trainers and other school employees were trained to apply the ECG > leads according to a diagram, take the ECG with the push of a button, and > forward the HIPAA compliant electronic file to DeBauche's team for > interpretation. > > Of the 2,057 freshmen screened, 9% (186 students) had an abnormal ECG > result and were advised to set up a consultation, get a screening > echocardiogram for diagnosis, or both. > > Only 0.6% had a serious enough abnormality to eliminate them from > participation in competitive sports. > > Among the 173 who accepted further examination for their abnormal findings, > the diagnoses included: > > * Eight cases of Wolff-Parkinson- White syndrome > * 23 cases of left ventricular hypertrophy > * Three cases of moderate severity mitral valve regurgitation > * Six cases of right ventricular pulmonary hypertension > * One case of cardiomyopathy > * 17 cases of mitral valve prolapse. > > One student was found to have noncompaction cardiomyopathy, a clearly > life-threatening condition that subsequently led to implantation of a > defibrillator and waitlisting for a heart transplant. > > A second case of aortic coartication and the right ventricular > abnormalities " certainly had major clinical significance, " the researchers > said. > > An echocardiogram to follow-up on abnormal cases could be carried out by > commercial screening firms specializing in large numbers of relatively easy > studies and reimbursed by all major insurers, DeBauche said. > > The ECG itself would cost only $0.50 per ECG for electrodes and about $2.00 > for interpretation. > > " When you find something this good you should do it, " DeBauche said. > > Barry lin, PhD, of Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, Mich., > agreed that this type of screening wouldn't necessarily need a clinical > cardiologist since a nurse or other trained staff could administer the ECG. > > " It's a very simple test, " he said. > > The biggest costs involve setting up the infrastructure, Zipes added. > > " We're talking about the lives of youngsters, " he said. " If that were your > son or daughter, you would want it done. " > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 11, 2010 Report Share Posted January 11, 2010 Young people have been dying from sudden cardiac death for a long time. It is not common and generally does not make the local news or the local newspaper for that matter. I know of several athletes in our community who have died of sudden cardiac death. Two particular cases come to mind. The first is a young athlete (19) who died while playing a basketball pick up game. It occurred in the mid- 70s. I was serving as assistant at the time and had fill out a report for the State medical examiner. This never made the local TV news or newspaper. A second case was a basketball player at a local college. This case did make the news. He had been seen by our hospital's cardiologist because of some abnormality- I do not have the specifics. The cardiologist made a diagnosis which disqualified the athlete for playing because of a high risk of sudden death. He went to England to play and was cleared there. He subsequently filed a lawsuit against the hospital cardiologist. The lawsuit was dropped when he died while playing basketball in England. It made the local news and If I am not mistaken the national news. Another case involved a basketball player at a Nationally ranked basketball program. I believe it was in the 80s. He had had an episode of cardiac arrythmia and was advised to not play. He played any way and died during a basketball game. I believe the college was in California and if I am not mistaken the program was Mt. St. which at the time was in the top 10. That definitely made the national news. Some day a parent is going to sue a school district for not screening properly. Sudden cardiac death is not a frequent occurrence. However when it does occur it is a tragedy made worse if it could have been prevent with proper screening. I am posting another article that will shed more light on this subject. Ralph Giarnella MD Southington Ct USA ________________________________ From: " deadliftdiva@... " <deadliftdiva@...> Supertraining Sent: Sun, January 10, 2010 8:12:34 PM Subject: Re: ECG Cost-Effective for Screening Student Athletes Yeah. It's fascinating that our ATHLETES at the college level are suffering from these problems. Imagine if you took a cross section of the rest of them? Either they're not making young people as well as they used to - or this is competely out of control in that age group?? (If we screened people in their 40's, would we come up with this many problems in athletic people??) Were people always this liable to have such heart conditions, particularly prime time athletes - all along? Is it that we're merely catching things people played entire pro careers with, without incident? What I wonder though is if this screening will eventually lead to lawsuits of " discrimination " for someone not getting their chance or scholarship - based only on this testing. Sometimes what institutions believe will save them money costs them more in the long run? The Phantom aka Schaefer, CMT/RMT, competing powerlifter Denver, Colorado, USA ============ ========= ========= === Re: ECG Cost-Effective for Screening Student Athletes I found this alos very interesting Ralph Giarnella MD Southington Ct USA ECG Cost-Effective for Screening Student Athletes By Crystal Phend, Senior Staff Writer, MedPage Today Published: November 16, 2009 Reviewed by Dori F. Zaleznik, MD; Associate Clinical Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston and Dorothy Caputo, MA, RN, BC-ADM, CDE, Nurse Planner Action Points * Note that the American Heart Association and American College of Cardiology guidelines suggest ECG as optional for preparticipation screening of student athletes. * Note that this study was published as an abstract and presented at a conference. These data and conclusions should be considered preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed journal. ORLANDO -- Cost issues should no longer keep electrocardiograms out of most schools' efforts to screen student athletes for potentially fatal heart problems, researchers said here. Recent declines in the price of ECG machines mean that students can be screened for a cost of less than $3 each after an initial investment of under $500 per school, according to a study led by DeBauche, MD, of Cypress Cardiology in Cypress, Texas. Addition of 12-lead ECG to screening would cost just $300 per year of life saved, DeBauche's group reported at the American Heart Association meeting. This price was so far below the typical cost-effectiveness threshold of $50,000 per life-year that there should no longer be any question about adopting ECG in screening, DeBauche said. His group set up a program to add a one-time ECG for every student participating in competitive sports in their suburban Houston school district. Although high school football is enormously popular in Texas where games can draw tens of thousands of spectators, like most other states, Texas requires only a perfunctory physical exam and completion of a questionnaire on possible symptoms and family cardiac history for participation. ECG is universally acknowledged as more likely to identify serious cardiac problems, and it has been adopted as an international standard for screening in much of the world. One prior study from a region in Italy, which pioneered nationwide screening of athletes with ECG in the late 1990s, revealed a 90% drop in sudden cardiac events after the screening program began. (See National Screening Slows Sudden Cardiac Deaths Among Athletes) But ECG has not been advocated in national guidelines for the U.S. in large part because of the cost, Zipes, MD, of Indiana University and a past president of the American College of Cardiology, noted. " The U.S. is behind the times when it comes to screening athletes, " he said, calling current efforts in much of the country woefully inadequate. Scattered U.S. programs have adopted ECG following the Italian model. " Everybody agrees, yes, it should be done, but it's optional because we don't think we can afford, on a national level, a mandated program, " DeBauche said. At current reimbursement levels, sending all student athletes to the hospital or a physician's office for an ECG at about $100 each would cost over an estimated $1 billion, DeBauche said. The program his group designed, though, would cost under $2 million to screen all 200,000 U.S. athletes in the ninth grade, which is an optimal age to catch problems -- before high school sports but after onset of puberty, he said. The program included providing laptop-based ECG machines for each of 10 high schools in the school district. Athletic trainers and other school employees were trained to apply the ECG leads according to a diagram, take the ECG with the push of a button, and forward the HIPAA compliant electronic file to DeBauche's team for interpretation. Of the 2,057 freshmen screened, 9% (186 students) had an abnormal ECG result and were advised to set up a consultation, get a screening echocardiogram for diagnosis, or both. Only 0.6% had a serious enough abnormality to eliminate them from participation in competitive sports. Among the 173 who accepted further examination for their abnormal findings, the diagnoses included: * Eight cases of Wolff-Parkinson- White syndrome * 23 cases of left ventricular hypertrophy * Three cases of moderate severity mitral valve regurgitation * Six cases of right ventricular pulmonary hypertension * One case of cardiomyopathy * 17 cases of mitral valve prolapse. One student was found to have noncompaction cardiomyopathy, a clearly life-threatening condition that subsequently led to implantation of a defibrillator and waitlisting for a heart transplant. A second case of aortic coartication and the right ventricular abnormalities " certainly had major clinical significance, " the researchers said. An echocardiogram to follow-up on abnormal cases could be carried out by commercial screening firms specializing in large numbers of relatively easy studies and reimbursed by all major insurers, DeBauche said. The ECG itself would cost only $0.50 per ECG for electrodes and about $2.00 for interpretation. " When you find something this good you should do it, " DeBauche said. Barry lin, PhD, of Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, Mich., agreed that this type of screening wouldn't necessarily need a clinical cardiologist since a nurse or other trained staff could administer the ECG. " It's a very simple test, " he said. The biggest costs involve setting up the infrastructure, Zipes added. " We're talking about the lives of youngsters, " he said. " If that were your son or daughter, you would want it done. " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 14, 2010 Report Share Posted January 14, 2010 Relevant excerpts to the recent post: Should Electrocardiograms Be Used as Part of a Preparticipation Physical Examination to Decrease the Risk of Sudden Cardiac Death? Riewald, PhD, CSCS, NSCA-CPT Riewald, PhD, CSCS Strength and Conditioning Journal: December 2009 - Volume 31 - Issue 6 - pp 95-96 Every year, we hear at least one story of a young athlete who died on the athletic field, the product of some previously undiagnosed cardiac condition. The results are tragic, and we are often left asking why this happened and if there was any way these all could have been prevented. When asked this question, many people immediately think of the preparticipation physical examination (PPE), which is required by many sports organizations, and look to see if a test could be performed to screen athletes and identify risks before they step on the field of play. The PPE, which typically requires an athlete to undergo a physical examination as well as complete a medical history questionnaire, is used to identify potential injuries or illnesses that may preclude an athlete from participating safely in the athletic program. Yet unless an athlete has a family history to suggest there may be a risk of cardiovascular disease, most cardiac conditions will fly under the radar with a " standard " PPE. Recently, more and more individuals and organizations have been advocating the use of electrocardiograms (ECGs or EKGs), or even more expensive echocardiograms, as part of the preparticipation screening. Electrocardiograms provide information specific to the working of the heart-information that can help increase the chances of detecting a cardiac condition. On paper, inclusion of an ECG makes perfect sense, but keep in mind there are trade-offs that must be taken into account when deciding to include an ECG as part of the PPE. Recently, in Medicine and Science in Sports and Exercise, Lawless and Best (1) put together a summary of the research related to the effectiveness and success of using ECGs to identify cardiac risk factors in young athletes. In reviewing the available literature, the authors highlight a number of important results that should be taken into consideration when weighing the pros and cons of including such a test in a PPE. Some of the points made from the research include * Some of the most comprehensive work with ECGs has been done in Italy, where comprehensive screening has reduced the incidence of sudden cardiac death by 89% over a 26-year period. * Electrocardiograms can accurately diagnose between 75 and 95% of the athletes with hypertrophic cardiac myopathy, a condition characterized by a thickening of the heart's walls and one that has received a lot of press due to several recent athlete deaths. * The inclusion of an ECG can increase the overall sensitivity of a PPE (the proportion of athletes with a heart condition who are correctly identified by the test) considerably over the " standard " PPE-from 2.5 to 6% to as much as 51 to 95%-depending on the type of underlying condition and the population being evaluated. * Yet at the same time, false positives can be as high as 40%, meaning athletes who do not truly have a heart condition could be excluded from participation based on a false finding, and * Even when athletes demonstrate a normal or only mildly abnormal ECG, there is still as much as a 4 to 5% chance, there is an undetected underlying heart condition (so, the test still will not identify everyone with a heart condition). * Most of the available data have been collected from a homogeneous pool of subjects, predominantly adult Caucasians. There is reason to believe that ECGs in athletic African Americans may differ from these data, and drawing conclusions from the available data may lead to improper diagnoses in this group of athletes. Additionally, adults can show markedly different ECGs compared to youth and adolescents. Many of the " recognizable features " that suggest an underlying heart condition, in fact, may not present themselves until adulthood. * The heart responds and adapts to exercise, and it is not uncommon to see " changes " in the ECGs of well-trained athletes. Are these " abnormalities " a reflection of a heart condition or do they reflect a normal adaptation to exercise? Also, data indicate that the " normal " changes may be more pronounced in some sports compared with others, making interpretation increasingly difficult. * There presently is no " gold standard " for evaluating ECGs, and it is not uncommon for health care professionals in the United States to analyze the same ECG and come away with different conclusions about the health of the athlete. * There is also the cost associated with conducting ECGs and any subsequent more discriminating tests that will need to be conducted to verify the results of a positive ECG. This is a lot to consider when making a decision about whether to include an ECG as part of a PPE. On the one hand, you may feel that athlete's health should trump all other decisions. But if you are requiring a test to be a part of a PPE, you would also like that test to have 100% accuracy in diagnosing underlying heart conditions. Taking these factors into account, the American Heart Association has recommended that ECGs need not be a mandatory part of a PPE screening for athletes. They cite the costs associated with testing a large number of athletes, the number of false positives (as well as the costs associated with further evaluating false positives), the lack of randomized controlled studies to demonstrate the superiority of the ECG over a traditional PPE, the lack of normative data in youth and certain demographics, and the variability inherent to ECG interpretation as the primary factors motivating their recommendation. ===================== Carruthers Wakefield, UK > > I found this alos very interesting > Ralph Giarnella MD > Southington Ct USA > > ECG Cost-Effective for Screening Student Athletes > By Crystal Phend, Senior Staff Writer, MedPage Today > Published: November 16, 2009 > Reviewed by Dori F. Zaleznik, MD; Associate Clinical Professor of Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston and > Dorothy Caputo, MA, RN, BC-ADM, CDE, Nurse Planner > > Action Points > > * Note that the American Heart Association and American College of Cardiology guidelines suggest ECG as optional for preparticipation screening of student athletes. > > > * Note that this study was published as an abstract and presented at a conference. These data and conclusions should be considered preliminary until published in a peer-reviewed journal. > > ORLANDO -- Cost issues should no longer keep electrocardiograms out of most schools' efforts to screen student athletes for potentially fatal heart problems, researchers said here. > > Recent declines in the price of ECG machines mean that students can be screened for a cost of less than $3 each after an initial investment of under $500 per school, according to a study led by DeBauche, MD, of Cypress Cardiology in Cypress, Texas. > > Addition of 12-lead ECG to screening would cost just $300 per year of life saved, DeBauche's group reported at the American Heart Association meeting. > > This price was so far below the typical cost-effectiveness threshold of $50,000 per life-year that there should no longer be any question about adopting ECG in screening, DeBauche said. > > His group set up a program to add a one-time ECG for every student participating in competitive sports in their suburban Houston school district. > > Although high school football is enormously popular in Texas where games can draw tens of thousands of spectators, like most other states, Texas requires only a perfunctory physical exam and completion of a questionnaire on possible symptoms and family cardiac history for participation. > > ECG is universally acknowledged as more likely to identify serious cardiac problems, and it has been adopted as an international standard for screening in much of the world. > > One prior study from a region in Italy, which pioneered nationwide screening of athletes with ECG in the late 1990s, revealed a 90% drop in sudden cardiac events after the screening program began. (See National Screening Slows Sudden Cardiac Deaths Among Athletes) > > But ECG has not been advocated in national guidelines for the U.S. in large part because of the cost, Zipes, MD, of Indiana University and a past president of the American College of Cardiology, noted. > > " The U.S. is behind the times when it comes to screening athletes, " he said, calling current efforts in much of the country woefully inadequate. > > Scattered U.S. programs have adopted ECG following the Italian model. " Everybody agrees, yes, it should be done, but it's optional because we don't think we can afford, on a national level, a mandated program, " DeBauche said. > > At current reimbursement levels, sending all student athletes to the hospital or a physician's office for an ECG at about $100 each would cost over an estimated $1 billion, DeBauche said. > > The program his group designed, though, would cost under $2 million to screen all 200,000 U.S. athletes in the ninth grade, which is an optimal age to catch problems -- before high school sports but after onset of puberty, he said. > > The program included providing laptop-based ECG machines for each of 10 high schools in the school district. > > Athletic trainers and other school employees were trained to apply the ECG leads according to a diagram, take the ECG with the push of a button, and forward the HIPAA compliant electronic file to DeBauche's team for interpretation. > > Of the 2,057 freshmen screened, 9% (186 students) had an abnormal ECG result and were advised to set up a consultation, get a screening echocardiogram for diagnosis, or both. > > Only 0.6% had a serious enough abnormality to eliminate them from participation in competitive sports. > > Among the 173 who accepted further examination for their abnormal findings, the diagnoses included: > > * Eight cases of Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome > * 23 cases of left ventricular hypertrophy > * Three cases of moderate severity mitral valve regurgitation > * Six cases of right ventricular pulmonary hypertension > * One case of cardiomyopathy > * 17 cases of mitral valve prolapse. > > One student was found to have noncompaction cardiomyopathy, a clearly life-threatening condition that subsequently led to implantation of a defibrillator and waitlisting for a heart transplant. > > A second case of aortic coartication and the right ventricular abnormalities " certainly had major clinical significance, " the researchers said. > > An echocardiogram to follow-up on abnormal cases could be carried out by commercial screening firms specializing in large numbers of relatively easy studies and reimbursed by all major insurers, DeBauche said. > > The ECG itself would cost only $0.50 per ECG for electrodes and about $2.00 for interpretation. > > " When you find something this good you should do it, " DeBauche said. > > Barry lin, PhD, of Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, Mich., agreed that this type of screening wouldn't necessarily need a clinical cardiologist since a nurse or other trained staff could administer the ECG. > > " It's a very simple test, " he said. > > The biggest costs involve setting up the infrastructure, Zipes added. > > " We're talking about the lives of youngsters, " he said. " If that were your son or daughter, you would want it done. " > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 14, 2010 Report Share Posted January 14, 2010 in the article below " The heart responds and adapts to exercise, and it is not uncommon to see " changes " in the ECGs of well-trained athletes. " made me wonder if the heart tests should exclude athletes or have us the trainer identify better training patterns to allow adaption to the sport? What do others think? As an example I know that my asthma (very mild) improves dramatically with improved conditioning, I just can't go at it with out well planned progression. Regards Nick Tatalias Johannesburg South Africa 2010/1/14 carruthersjam <Carruthersjam@...> > > > > Relevant excerpts to the recent post: > > Should Electrocardiograms Be Used as Part of a Preparticipation Physical > Examination to Decrease the Risk of Sudden Cardiac Death? > Riewald, PhD, CSCS, NSCA-CPT > > Riewald, PhD, CSCS > > Strength and Conditioning Journal: > December 2009 - Volume 31 - Issue 6 - pp 95-96 > > Every year, we hear at least one story of a young athlete who died on the > athletic field, the product of some previously undiagnosed cardiac > condition. The results are tragic, and we are often left asking why this > happened and if there was any way these all could have been prevented. When > asked this question, many people immediately think of the preparticipation > physical examination (PPE), which is required by many sports organizations, > and look to see if a test could be performed to screen athletes and identify > risks before they step on the field of play. The PPE, which typically > requires an athlete to undergo a physical examination as well as complete a > medical history questionnaire, is used to identify potential injuries or > illnesses that may preclude an athlete from participating safely in the > athletic program. Yet unless an athlete has a family history to suggest > there may be a risk of cardiovascular disease, most cardiac conditions will > fly under the radar with a " standard " PPE. > Recently, more and more individuals and organizations have been advocating > the use of electrocardiograms (ECGs or EKGs), or even more expensive > echocardiograms, as part of the preparticipation screening. > Electrocardiograms provide information specific to the working of the > heart-information that can help increase the chances of detecting a cardiac > condition. On paper, inclusion of an ECG makes perfect sense, but keep in > mind there are trade-offs that must be taken into account when deciding to > include an ECG as part of the PPE. Recently, in Medicine and Science in > Sports and Exercise, Lawless and Best (1) put together a summary of the > research related to the effectiveness and success of using ECGs to identify > cardiac risk factors in young athletes. > > In reviewing the available literature, the authors highlight a number of > important results that should be taken into consideration when weighing the > pros and cons of including such a test in a PPE. Some of the points made > from the research include > * Some of the most comprehensive work with ECGs has been done in Italy, > where comprehensive screening has reduced the incidence of sudden cardiac > death by 89% over a 26-year period. > * Electrocardiograms can accurately diagnose between 75 and 95% of the > athletes with hypertrophic cardiac myopathy, a condition characterized by a > thickening of the heart's walls and one that has received a lot of press due > to several recent athlete deaths. > * The inclusion of an ECG can increase the overall sensitivity of a PPE > (the proportion of athletes with a heart condition who are correctly > identified by the test) considerably over the " standard " PPE-from 2.5 to 6% > to as much as 51 to 95%-depending on the type of underlying condition and > the population being evaluated. > * Yet at the same time, false positives can be as high as 40%, meaning > athletes who do not truly have a heart condition could be excluded from > participation based on a false finding, and > * Even when athletes demonstrate a normal or only mildly abnormal ECG, > there is still as much as a 4 to 5% chance, there is an undetected > underlying heart condition (so, the test still will not identify everyone > with a heart condition). > * Most of the available data have been collected from a homogeneous pool of > subjects, predominantly adult Caucasians. There is reason to believe that > ECGs in athletic African Americans may differ from these data, and drawing > conclusions from the available data may lead to improper diagnoses in this > group of athletes. Additionally, adults can show markedly different ECGs > compared to youth and adolescents. Many of the " recognizable features " that > suggest an underlying heart condition, in fact, may not present themselves > until adulthood. > * The heart responds and adapts to exercise, and it is not uncommon to see > " changes " in the ECGs of well-trained athletes. Are these " abnormalities " a > reflection of a heart condition or do they reflect a normal adaptation to > exercise? Also, data indicate that the " normal " changes may be more > pronounced in some sports compared with others, making interpretation > increasingly difficult. > * There presently is no " gold standard " for evaluating ECGs, and it is not > uncommon for health care professionals in the United States to analyze the > same ECG and come away with different conclusions about the health of the > athlete. > * There is also the cost associated with conducting ECGs and any subsequent > more discriminating tests that will need to be conducted to verify the > results of a positive ECG. > > This is a lot to consider when making a decision about whether to include > an ECG as part of a PPE. On the one hand, you may feel that athlete's health > should trump all other decisions. But if you are requiring a test to be a > part of a PPE, you would also like that test to have 100% accuracy in > diagnosing underlying heart conditions. Taking these factors into account, > the American Heart Association has recommended that ECGs need not be a > mandatory part of a PPE screening for athletes. They cite the costs > associated with testing a large number of athletes, the number of false > positives (as well as the costs associated with further evaluating false > positives), the lack of randomized controlled studies to demonstrate the > superiority of the ECG over a traditional PPE, the lack of normative data in > youth and certain demographics, and the variability inherent to ECG > interpretation as the primary factors motivating their recommendation. > > ===================== > Carruthers > Wakefield, UK > > > > > > > I found this alos very interesting > > Ralph Giarnella MD > > Southington Ct USA > > > > ECG Cost-Effective for Screening Student Athletes > > By Crystal Phend, Senior Staff Writer, MedPage Today > > Published: November 16, 2009 > > Reviewed by Dori F. Zaleznik, MD; Associate Clinical Professor of > Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston and > > Dorothy Caputo, MA, RN, BC-ADM, CDE, Nurse Planner > > > > Action Points > > > > * Note that the American Heart Association and American College of > Cardiology guidelines suggest ECG as optional for preparticipation screening > of student athletes. > > > > > > * Note that this study was published as an abstract and presented at a > conference. These data and conclusions should be considered preliminary > until published in a peer-reviewed journal. > > > > ORLANDO -- Cost issues should no longer keep electrocardiograms out of > most schools' efforts to screen student athletes for potentially fatal heart > problems, researchers said here. > > > > Recent declines in the price of ECG machines mean that students can be > screened for a cost of less than $3 each after an initial investment of > under $500 per school, according to a study led by DeBauche, MD, of > Cypress Cardiology in Cypress, Texas. > > > > Addition of 12-lead ECG to screening would cost just $300 per year of > life saved, DeBauche's group reported at the American Heart Association > meeting. > > > > This price was so far below the typical cost-effectiveness threshold of > $50,000 per life-year that there should no longer be any question about > adopting ECG in screening, DeBauche said. > > > > His group set up a program to add a one-time ECG for every student > participating in competitive sports in their suburban Houston school > district. > > > > Although high school football is enormously popular in Texas where games > can draw tens of thousands of spectators, like most other states, Texas > requires only a perfunctory physical exam and completion of a questionnaire > on possible symptoms and family cardiac history for participation. > > > > ECG is universally acknowledged as more likely to identify serious > cardiac problems, and it has been adopted as an international standard for > screening in much of the world. > > > > One prior study from a region in Italy, which pioneered nationwide > screening of athletes with ECG in the late 1990s, revealed a 90% drop in > sudden cardiac events after the screening program began. (See National > Screening Slows Sudden Cardiac Deaths Among Athletes) > > > > But ECG has not been advocated in national guidelines for the U.S. in > large part because of the cost, Zipes, MD, of Indiana University and > a past president of the American College of Cardiology, noted. > > > > " The U.S. is behind the times when it comes to screening athletes, " he > said, calling current efforts in much of the country woefully inadequate. > > > > Scattered U.S. programs have adopted ECG following the Italian model. > " Everybody agrees, yes, it should be done, but it's optional because we > don't think we can afford, on a national level, a mandated program, " > DeBauche said. > > > > At current reimbursement levels, sending all student athletes to the > hospital or a physician's office for an ECG at about $100 each would cost > over an estimated $1 billion, DeBauche said. > > > > The program his group designed, though, would cost under $2 million to > screen all 200,000 U.S. athletes in the ninth grade, which is an optimal age > to catch problems -- before high school sports but after onset of puberty, > he said. > > > > The program included providing laptop-based ECG machines for each of 10 > high schools in the school district. > > > > Athletic trainers and other school employees were trained to apply the > ECG leads according to a diagram, take the ECG with the push of a button, > and forward the HIPAA compliant electronic file to DeBauche's team for > interpretation. > > > > Of the 2,057 freshmen screened, 9% (186 students) had an abnormal ECG > result and were advised to set up a consultation, get a screening > echocardiogram for diagnosis, or both. > > > > Only 0.6% had a serious enough abnormality to eliminate them from > participation in competitive sports. > > > > Among the 173 who accepted further examination for their abnormal > findings, the diagnoses included: > > > > * Eight cases of Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome > > * 23 cases of left ventricular hypertrophy > > * Three cases of moderate severity mitral valve regurgitation > > * Six cases of right ventricular pulmonary hypertension > > * One case of cardiomyopathy > > * 17 cases of mitral valve prolapse. > > > > One student was found to have noncompaction cardiomyopathy, a clearly > life-threatening condition that subsequently led to implantation of a > defibrillator and waitlisting for a heart transplant. > > > > A second case of aortic coartication and the right ventricular > abnormalities " certainly had major clinical significance, " the researchers > said. > > > > An echocardiogram to follow-up on abnormal cases could be carried out by > commercial screening firms specializing in large numbers of relatively easy > studies and reimbursed by all major insurers, DeBauche said. > > > > The ECG itself would cost only $0.50 per ECG for electrodes and about > $2.00 for interpretation. > > > > " When you find something this good you should do it, " DeBauche said. > > > > Barry lin, PhD, of Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, Mich., > agreed that this type of screening wouldn't necessarily need a clinical > cardiologist since a nurse or other trained staff could administer the ECG. > > > > " It's a very simple test, " he said. > > > > The biggest costs involve setting up the infrastructure, Zipes added. > > > > " We're talking about the lives of youngsters, " he said. " If that were > your son or daughter, you would want it done. " > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 14, 2010 Report Share Posted January 14, 2010 in the article below " The heart responds and adapts to exercise, and it is not uncommon to see " changes " in the ECGs of well-trained athletes. " made me wonder if the heart tests should exclude athletes or have us the trainer identify better training patterns to allow adaption to the sport? What do others think? As an example I know that my asthma (very mild) improves dramatically with improved conditioning, I just can't go at it with out well planned progression. Regards Nick Tatalias Johannesburg South Africa 2010/1/14 carruthersjam <Carruthersjam@...> > > > > Relevant excerpts to the recent post: > > Should Electrocardiograms Be Used as Part of a Preparticipation Physical > Examination to Decrease the Risk of Sudden Cardiac Death? > Riewald, PhD, CSCS, NSCA-CPT > > Riewald, PhD, CSCS > > Strength and Conditioning Journal: > December 2009 - Volume 31 - Issue 6 - pp 95-96 > > Every year, we hear at least one story of a young athlete who died on the > athletic field, the product of some previously undiagnosed cardiac > condition. The results are tragic, and we are often left asking why this > happened and if there was any way these all could have been prevented. When > asked this question, many people immediately think of the preparticipation > physical examination (PPE), which is required by many sports organizations, > and look to see if a test could be performed to screen athletes and identify > risks before they step on the field of play. The PPE, which typically > requires an athlete to undergo a physical examination as well as complete a > medical history questionnaire, is used to identify potential injuries or > illnesses that may preclude an athlete from participating safely in the > athletic program. Yet unless an athlete has a family history to suggest > there may be a risk of cardiovascular disease, most cardiac conditions will > fly under the radar with a " standard " PPE. > Recently, more and more individuals and organizations have been advocating > the use of electrocardiograms (ECGs or EKGs), or even more expensive > echocardiograms, as part of the preparticipation screening. > Electrocardiograms provide information specific to the working of the > heart-information that can help increase the chances of detecting a cardiac > condition. On paper, inclusion of an ECG makes perfect sense, but keep in > mind there are trade-offs that must be taken into account when deciding to > include an ECG as part of the PPE. Recently, in Medicine and Science in > Sports and Exercise, Lawless and Best (1) put together a summary of the > research related to the effectiveness and success of using ECGs to identify > cardiac risk factors in young athletes. > > In reviewing the available literature, the authors highlight a number of > important results that should be taken into consideration when weighing the > pros and cons of including such a test in a PPE. Some of the points made > from the research include > * Some of the most comprehensive work with ECGs has been done in Italy, > where comprehensive screening has reduced the incidence of sudden cardiac > death by 89% over a 26-year period. > * Electrocardiograms can accurately diagnose between 75 and 95% of the > athletes with hypertrophic cardiac myopathy, a condition characterized by a > thickening of the heart's walls and one that has received a lot of press due > to several recent athlete deaths. > * The inclusion of an ECG can increase the overall sensitivity of a PPE > (the proportion of athletes with a heart condition who are correctly > identified by the test) considerably over the " standard " PPE-from 2.5 to 6% > to as much as 51 to 95%-depending on the type of underlying condition and > the population being evaluated. > * Yet at the same time, false positives can be as high as 40%, meaning > athletes who do not truly have a heart condition could be excluded from > participation based on a false finding, and > * Even when athletes demonstrate a normal or only mildly abnormal ECG, > there is still as much as a 4 to 5% chance, there is an undetected > underlying heart condition (so, the test still will not identify everyone > with a heart condition). > * Most of the available data have been collected from a homogeneous pool of > subjects, predominantly adult Caucasians. There is reason to believe that > ECGs in athletic African Americans may differ from these data, and drawing > conclusions from the available data may lead to improper diagnoses in this > group of athletes. Additionally, adults can show markedly different ECGs > compared to youth and adolescents. Many of the " recognizable features " that > suggest an underlying heart condition, in fact, may not present themselves > until adulthood. > * The heart responds and adapts to exercise, and it is not uncommon to see > " changes " in the ECGs of well-trained athletes. Are these " abnormalities " a > reflection of a heart condition or do they reflect a normal adaptation to > exercise? Also, data indicate that the " normal " changes may be more > pronounced in some sports compared with others, making interpretation > increasingly difficult. > * There presently is no " gold standard " for evaluating ECGs, and it is not > uncommon for health care professionals in the United States to analyze the > same ECG and come away with different conclusions about the health of the > athlete. > * There is also the cost associated with conducting ECGs and any subsequent > more discriminating tests that will need to be conducted to verify the > results of a positive ECG. > > This is a lot to consider when making a decision about whether to include > an ECG as part of a PPE. On the one hand, you may feel that athlete's health > should trump all other decisions. But if you are requiring a test to be a > part of a PPE, you would also like that test to have 100% accuracy in > diagnosing underlying heart conditions. Taking these factors into account, > the American Heart Association has recommended that ECGs need not be a > mandatory part of a PPE screening for athletes. They cite the costs > associated with testing a large number of athletes, the number of false > positives (as well as the costs associated with further evaluating false > positives), the lack of randomized controlled studies to demonstrate the > superiority of the ECG over a traditional PPE, the lack of normative data in > youth and certain demographics, and the variability inherent to ECG > interpretation as the primary factors motivating their recommendation. > > ===================== > Carruthers > Wakefield, UK > > > > > > > I found this alos very interesting > > Ralph Giarnella MD > > Southington Ct USA > > > > ECG Cost-Effective for Screening Student Athletes > > By Crystal Phend, Senior Staff Writer, MedPage Today > > Published: November 16, 2009 > > Reviewed by Dori F. Zaleznik, MD; Associate Clinical Professor of > Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston and > > Dorothy Caputo, MA, RN, BC-ADM, CDE, Nurse Planner > > > > Action Points > > > > * Note that the American Heart Association and American College of > Cardiology guidelines suggest ECG as optional for preparticipation screening > of student athletes. > > > > > > * Note that this study was published as an abstract and presented at a > conference. These data and conclusions should be considered preliminary > until published in a peer-reviewed journal. > > > > ORLANDO -- Cost issues should no longer keep electrocardiograms out of > most schools' efforts to screen student athletes for potentially fatal heart > problems, researchers said here. > > > > Recent declines in the price of ECG machines mean that students can be > screened for a cost of less than $3 each after an initial investment of > under $500 per school, according to a study led by DeBauche, MD, of > Cypress Cardiology in Cypress, Texas. > > > > Addition of 12-lead ECG to screening would cost just $300 per year of > life saved, DeBauche's group reported at the American Heart Association > meeting. > > > > This price was so far below the typical cost-effectiveness threshold of > $50,000 per life-year that there should no longer be any question about > adopting ECG in screening, DeBauche said. > > > > His group set up a program to add a one-time ECG for every student > participating in competitive sports in their suburban Houston school > district. > > > > Although high school football is enormously popular in Texas where games > can draw tens of thousands of spectators, like most other states, Texas > requires only a perfunctory physical exam and completion of a questionnaire > on possible symptoms and family cardiac history for participation. > > > > ECG is universally acknowledged as more likely to identify serious > cardiac problems, and it has been adopted as an international standard for > screening in much of the world. > > > > One prior study from a region in Italy, which pioneered nationwide > screening of athletes with ECG in the late 1990s, revealed a 90% drop in > sudden cardiac events after the screening program began. (See National > Screening Slows Sudden Cardiac Deaths Among Athletes) > > > > But ECG has not been advocated in national guidelines for the U.S. in > large part because of the cost, Zipes, MD, of Indiana University and > a past president of the American College of Cardiology, noted. > > > > " The U.S. is behind the times when it comes to screening athletes, " he > said, calling current efforts in much of the country woefully inadequate. > > > > Scattered U.S. programs have adopted ECG following the Italian model. > " Everybody agrees, yes, it should be done, but it's optional because we > don't think we can afford, on a national level, a mandated program, " > DeBauche said. > > > > At current reimbursement levels, sending all student athletes to the > hospital or a physician's office for an ECG at about $100 each would cost > over an estimated $1 billion, DeBauche said. > > > > The program his group designed, though, would cost under $2 million to > screen all 200,000 U.S. athletes in the ninth grade, which is an optimal age > to catch problems -- before high school sports but after onset of puberty, > he said. > > > > The program included providing laptop-based ECG machines for each of 10 > high schools in the school district. > > > > Athletic trainers and other school employees were trained to apply the > ECG leads according to a diagram, take the ECG with the push of a button, > and forward the HIPAA compliant electronic file to DeBauche's team for > interpretation. > > > > Of the 2,057 freshmen screened, 9% (186 students) had an abnormal ECG > result and were advised to set up a consultation, get a screening > echocardiogram for diagnosis, or both. > > > > Only 0.6% had a serious enough abnormality to eliminate them from > participation in competitive sports. > > > > Among the 173 who accepted further examination for their abnormal > findings, the diagnoses included: > > > > * Eight cases of Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome > > * 23 cases of left ventricular hypertrophy > > * Three cases of moderate severity mitral valve regurgitation > > * Six cases of right ventricular pulmonary hypertension > > * One case of cardiomyopathy > > * 17 cases of mitral valve prolapse. > > > > One student was found to have noncompaction cardiomyopathy, a clearly > life-threatening condition that subsequently led to implantation of a > defibrillator and waitlisting for a heart transplant. > > > > A second case of aortic coartication and the right ventricular > abnormalities " certainly had major clinical significance, " the researchers > said. > > > > An echocardiogram to follow-up on abnormal cases could be carried out by > commercial screening firms specializing in large numbers of relatively easy > studies and reimbursed by all major insurers, DeBauche said. > > > > The ECG itself would cost only $0.50 per ECG for electrodes and about > $2.00 for interpretation. > > > > " When you find something this good you should do it, " DeBauche said. > > > > Barry lin, PhD, of Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, Mich., > agreed that this type of screening wouldn't necessarily need a clinical > cardiologist since a nurse or other trained staff could administer the ECG. > > > > " It's a very simple test, " he said. > > > > The biggest costs involve setting up the infrastructure, Zipes added. > > > > " We're talking about the lives of youngsters, " he said. " If that were > your son or daughter, you would want it done. " > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 15, 2010 Report Share Posted January 15, 2010 While training does change the ekg somewhat there is a definite difference between hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (patholigic enlargement of the heart) and athletic enalarged heart. A simple ECG would not necessarily differentiate however another test (echocardiogram) would. Screening tests are never 100%. They are meant to point out potential problems which need further investigation. It is important that they are inexpensive and easy to perform on large number of people. It is also important that there are minimal false negatives. There will be more false positives but that is why positives will need closer evaluation. It seems strange that Italy has been able to do this screening for the past 20 years and perhaps save many lives and yet we seem to find it burdensome. Unfortunately it might take the death of a student and subsequent multimillion dollar lawsuit against a school district to make it feasible. Italy was pro-active we seem to be reactive. Wait until a crisis to change the way we do things. Ralph Giarnella MD Southington Ct USA ________________________________ From: Nick Tatalias <nick.tatalias@...> Supertraining Sent: Fri, January 15, 2010 1:57:16 AM Subject: Re: Re: ECG Cost-Effective for Screening Student Athletes in the article below " The heart responds and adapts to exercise, and it is not uncommon to see " changes " in the ECGs of well-trained athletes. " made me wonder if the heart tests should exclude athletes or have us the trainer identify better training patterns to allow adaption to the sport? What do others think? As an example I know that my asthma (very mild) improves dramatically with improved conditioning, I just can't go at it with out well planned progression. Regards Nick Tatalias Johannesburg South Africa 2010/1/14 carruthersjam <Carruthersjam@ aol.com> > > > > Relevant excerpts to the recent post: > > Should Electrocardiograms Be Used as Part of a Preparticipation Physical > Examination to Decrease the Risk of Sudden Cardiac Death? > Riewald, PhD, CSCS, NSCA-CPT > > Riewald, PhD, CSCS > > Strength and Conditioning Journal: > December 2009 - Volume 31 - Issue 6 - pp 95-96 > > Every year, we hear at least one story of a young athlete who died on the > athletic field, the product of some previously undiagnosed cardiac > condition. The results are tragic, and we are often left asking why this > happened and if there was any way these all could have been prevented. When > asked this question, many people immediately think of the preparticipation > physical examination (PPE), which is required by many sports organizations, > and look to see if a test could be performed to screen athletes and identify > risks before they step on the field of play. The PPE, which typically > requires an athlete to undergo a physical examination as well as complete a > medical history questionnaire, is used to identify potential injuries or > illnesses that may preclude an athlete from participating safely in the > athletic program. Yet unless an athlete has a family history to suggest > there may be a risk of cardiovascular disease, most cardiac conditions will > fly under the radar with a " standard " PPE. > Recently, more and more individuals and organizations have been advocating > the use of electrocardiograms (ECGs or EKGs), or even more expensive > echocardiograms, as part of the preparticipation screening. > Electrocardiograms provide information specific to the working of the > heart-information that can help increase the chances of detecting a cardiac > condition. On paper, inclusion of an ECG makes perfect sense, but keep in > mind there are trade-offs that must be taken into account when deciding to > include an ECG as part of the PPE. Recently, in Medicine and Science in > Sports and Exercise, Lawless and Best (1) put together a summary of the > research related to the effectiveness and success of using ECGs to identify > cardiac risk factors in young athletes. > > In reviewing the available literature, the authors highlight a number of > important results that should be taken into consideration when weighing the > pros and cons of including such a test in a PPE. Some of the points made > from the research include > * Some of the most comprehensive work with ECGs has been done in Italy, > where comprehensive screening has reduced the incidence of sudden cardiac > death by 89% over a 26-year period.. > * Electrocardiograms can accurately diagnose between 75 and 95% of the > athletes with hypertrophic cardiac myopathy, a condition characterized by a > thickening of the heart's walls and one that has received a lot of press due > to several recent athlete deaths. > * The inclusion of an ECG can increase the overall sensitivity of a PPE > (the proportion of athletes with a heart condition who are correctly > identified by the test) considerably over the " standard " PPE-from 2.5 to 6% > to as much as 51 to 95%-depending on the type of underlying condition and > the population being evaluated. > * Yet at the same time, false positives can be as high as 40%, meaning > athletes who do not truly have a heart condition could be excluded from > participation based on a false finding, and > * Even when athletes demonstrate a normal or only mildly abnormal ECG, > there is still as much as a 4 to 5% chance, there is an undetected > underlying heart condition (so, the test still will not identify everyone > with a heart condition). > * Most of the available data have been collected from a homogeneous pool of > subjects, predominantly adult Caucasians. There is reason to believe that > ECGs in athletic African Americans may differ from these data, and drawing > conclusions from the available data may lead to improper diagnoses in this > group of athletes. Additionally, adults can show markedly different ECGs > compared to youth and adolescents. Many of the " recognizable features " that > suggest an underlying heart condition, in fact, may not present themselves > until adulthood. > * The heart responds and adapts to exercise, and it is not uncommon to see > " changes " in the ECGs of well-trained athletes. Are these " abnormalities " a > reflection of a heart condition or do they reflect a normal adaptation to > exercise? Also, data indicate that the " normal " changes may be more > pronounced in some sports compared with others, making interpretation > increasingly difficult. > * There presently is no " gold standard " for evaluating ECGs, and it is not > uncommon for health care professionals in the United States to analyze the > same ECG and come away with different conclusions about the health of the > athlete. > * There is also the cost associated with conducting ECGs and any subsequent > more discriminating tests that will need to be conducted to verify the > results of a positive ECG. > > This is a lot to consider when making a decision about whether to include > an ECG as part of a PPE. On the one hand, you may feel that athlete's health > should trump all other decisions. But if you are requiring a test to be a > part of a PPE, you would also like that test to have 100% accuracy in > diagnosing underlying heart conditions. Taking these factors into account, > the American Heart Association has recommended that ECGs need not be a > mandatory part of a PPE screening for athletes. They cite the costs > associated with testing a large number of athletes, the number of false > positives (as well as the costs associated with further evaluating false > positives), the lack of randomized controlled studies to demonstrate the > superiority of the ECG over a traditional PPE, the lack of normative data in > youth and certain demographics, and the variability inherent to ECG > interpretation as the primary factors motivating their recommendation. > > ============ ========= > Carruthers > Wakefield, UK > > > > > > > I found this alos very interesting > > Ralph Giarnella MD > > Southington Ct USA > > > > ECG Cost-Effective for Screening Student Athletes > > By Crystal Phend, Senior Staff Writer, MedPage Today > > Published: November 16, 2009 > > Reviewed by Dori F. Zaleznik, MD; Associate Clinical Professor of > Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston and > > Dorothy Caputo, MA, RN, BC-ADM, CDE, Nurse Planner > > > > Action Points > > > > * Note that the American Heart Association and American College of > Cardiology guidelines suggest ECG as optional for preparticipation screening > of student athletes. > > > > > > * Note that this study was published as an abstract and presented at a > conference. These data and conclusions should be considered preliminary > until published in a peer-reviewed journal. > > > > ORLANDO -- Cost issues should no longer keep electrocardiograms out of > most schools' efforts to screen student athletes for potentially fatal heart > problems, researchers said here. > > > > Recent declines in the price of ECG machines mean that students can be > screened for a cost of less than $3 each after an initial investment of > under $500 per school, according to a study led by DeBauche, MD, of > Cypress Cardiology in Cypress, Texas. > > > > Addition of 12-lead ECG to screening would cost just $300 per year of > life saved, DeBauche's group reported at the American Heart Association > meeting. > > > > This price was so far below the typical cost-effectiveness threshold of > $50,000 per life-year that there should no longer be any question about > adopting ECG in screening, DeBauche said. > > > > His group set up a program to add a one-time ECG for every student > participating in competitive sports in their suburban Houston school > district. > > > > Although high school football is enormously popular in Texas where games > can draw tens of thousands of spectators, like most other states, Texas > requires only a perfunctory physical exam and completion of a questionnaire > on possible symptoms and family cardiac history for participation. > > > > ECG is universally acknowledged as more likely to identify serious > cardiac problems, and it has been adopted as an international standard for > screening in much of the world. > > > > One prior study from a region in Italy, which pioneered nationwide > screening of athletes with ECG in the late 1990s, revealed a 90% drop in > sudden cardiac events after the screening program began. (See National > Screening Slows Sudden Cardiac Deaths Among Athletes) > > > > But ECG has not been advocated in national guidelines for the U.S. in > large part because of the cost, Zipes, MD, of Indiana University and > a past president of the American College of Cardiology, noted. > > > > " The U.S. is behind the times when it comes to screening athletes, " he > said, calling current efforts in much of the country woefully inadequate. > > > > Scattered U.S. programs have adopted ECG following the Italian model. > " Everybody agrees, yes, it should be done, but it's optional because we > don't think we can afford, on a national level, a mandated program, " > DeBauche said. > > > > At current reimbursement levels, sending all student athletes to the > hospital or a physician's office for an ECG at about $100 each would cost > over an estimated $1 billion, DeBauche said. > > > > The program his group designed, though, would cost under $2 million to > screen all 200,000 U.S. athletes in the ninth grade, which is an optimal age > to catch problems -- before high school sports but after onset of puberty, > he said. > > > > The program included providing laptop-based ECG machines for each of 10 > high schools in the school district. > > > > Athletic trainers and other school employees were trained to apply the > ECG leads according to a diagram, take the ECG with the push of a button, > and forward the HIPAA compliant electronic file to DeBauche's team for > interpretation. > > > > Of the 2,057 freshmen screened, 9% (186 students) had an abnormal ECG > result and were advised to set up a consultation, get a screening > echocardiogram for diagnosis, or both. > > > > Only 0.6% had a serious enough abnormality to eliminate them from > participation in competitive sports. > > > > Among the 173 who accepted further examination for their abnormal > findings, the diagnoses included: > > > > * Eight cases of Wolff-Parkinson- White syndrome > > * 23 cases of left ventricular hypertrophy > > * Three cases of moderate severity mitral valve regurgitation > > * Six cases of right ventricular pulmonary hypertension > > * One case of cardiomyopathy > > * 17 cases of mitral valve prolapse. > > > > One student was found to have noncompaction cardiomyopathy, a clearly > life-threatening condition that subsequently led to implantation of a > defibrillator and waitlisting for a heart transplant. > > > > A second case of aortic coartication and the right ventricular > abnormalities " certainly had major clinical significance, " the researchers > said. > > > > An echocardiogram to follow-up on abnormal cases could be carried out by > commercial screening firms specializing in large numbers of relatively easy > studies and reimbursed by all major insurers, DeBauche said. > > > > The ECG itself would cost only $0.50 per ECG for electrodes and about > $2.00 for interpretation. > > > > " When you find something this good you should do it, " DeBauche said. > > > > Barry lin, PhD, of Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, Mich., > agreed that this type of screening wouldn't necessarily need a clinical > cardiologist since a nurse or other trained staff could administer the ECG. > > > > " It's a very simple test, " he said. > > > > The biggest costs involve setting up the infrastructure, Zipes added. > > > > " We're talking about the lives of youngsters, " he said. " If that were > your son or daughter, you would want it done. " > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 15, 2010 Report Share Posted January 15, 2010 While training does change the ekg somewhat there is a definite difference between hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (patholigic enlargement of the heart) and athletic enalarged heart. A simple ECG would not necessarily differentiate however another test (echocardiogram) would. Screening tests are never 100%. They are meant to point out potential problems which need further investigation. It is important that they are inexpensive and easy to perform on large number of people. It is also important that there are minimal false negatives. There will be more false positives but that is why positives will need closer evaluation. It seems strange that Italy has been able to do this screening for the past 20 years and perhaps save many lives and yet we seem to find it burdensome. Unfortunately it might take the death of a student and subsequent multimillion dollar lawsuit against a school district to make it feasible. Italy was pro-active we seem to be reactive. Wait until a crisis to change the way we do things. Ralph Giarnella MD Southington Ct USA ________________________________ From: Nick Tatalias <nick.tatalias@...> Supertraining Sent: Fri, January 15, 2010 1:57:16 AM Subject: Re: Re: ECG Cost-Effective for Screening Student Athletes in the article below " The heart responds and adapts to exercise, and it is not uncommon to see " changes " in the ECGs of well-trained athletes. " made me wonder if the heart tests should exclude athletes or have us the trainer identify better training patterns to allow adaption to the sport? What do others think? As an example I know that my asthma (very mild) improves dramatically with improved conditioning, I just can't go at it with out well planned progression. Regards Nick Tatalias Johannesburg South Africa 2010/1/14 carruthersjam <Carruthersjam@ aol.com> > > > > Relevant excerpts to the recent post: > > Should Electrocardiograms Be Used as Part of a Preparticipation Physical > Examination to Decrease the Risk of Sudden Cardiac Death? > Riewald, PhD, CSCS, NSCA-CPT > > Riewald, PhD, CSCS > > Strength and Conditioning Journal: > December 2009 - Volume 31 - Issue 6 - pp 95-96 > > Every year, we hear at least one story of a young athlete who died on the > athletic field, the product of some previously undiagnosed cardiac > condition. The results are tragic, and we are often left asking why this > happened and if there was any way these all could have been prevented. When > asked this question, many people immediately think of the preparticipation > physical examination (PPE), which is required by many sports organizations, > and look to see if a test could be performed to screen athletes and identify > risks before they step on the field of play. The PPE, which typically > requires an athlete to undergo a physical examination as well as complete a > medical history questionnaire, is used to identify potential injuries or > illnesses that may preclude an athlete from participating safely in the > athletic program. Yet unless an athlete has a family history to suggest > there may be a risk of cardiovascular disease, most cardiac conditions will > fly under the radar with a " standard " PPE. > Recently, more and more individuals and organizations have been advocating > the use of electrocardiograms (ECGs or EKGs), or even more expensive > echocardiograms, as part of the preparticipation screening. > Electrocardiograms provide information specific to the working of the > heart-information that can help increase the chances of detecting a cardiac > condition. On paper, inclusion of an ECG makes perfect sense, but keep in > mind there are trade-offs that must be taken into account when deciding to > include an ECG as part of the PPE. Recently, in Medicine and Science in > Sports and Exercise, Lawless and Best (1) put together a summary of the > research related to the effectiveness and success of using ECGs to identify > cardiac risk factors in young athletes. > > In reviewing the available literature, the authors highlight a number of > important results that should be taken into consideration when weighing the > pros and cons of including such a test in a PPE. Some of the points made > from the research include > * Some of the most comprehensive work with ECGs has been done in Italy, > where comprehensive screening has reduced the incidence of sudden cardiac > death by 89% over a 26-year period.. > * Electrocardiograms can accurately diagnose between 75 and 95% of the > athletes with hypertrophic cardiac myopathy, a condition characterized by a > thickening of the heart's walls and one that has received a lot of press due > to several recent athlete deaths. > * The inclusion of an ECG can increase the overall sensitivity of a PPE > (the proportion of athletes with a heart condition who are correctly > identified by the test) considerably over the " standard " PPE-from 2.5 to 6% > to as much as 51 to 95%-depending on the type of underlying condition and > the population being evaluated. > * Yet at the same time, false positives can be as high as 40%, meaning > athletes who do not truly have a heart condition could be excluded from > participation based on a false finding, and > * Even when athletes demonstrate a normal or only mildly abnormal ECG, > there is still as much as a 4 to 5% chance, there is an undetected > underlying heart condition (so, the test still will not identify everyone > with a heart condition). > * Most of the available data have been collected from a homogeneous pool of > subjects, predominantly adult Caucasians. There is reason to believe that > ECGs in athletic African Americans may differ from these data, and drawing > conclusions from the available data may lead to improper diagnoses in this > group of athletes. Additionally, adults can show markedly different ECGs > compared to youth and adolescents. Many of the " recognizable features " that > suggest an underlying heart condition, in fact, may not present themselves > until adulthood. > * The heart responds and adapts to exercise, and it is not uncommon to see > " changes " in the ECGs of well-trained athletes. Are these " abnormalities " a > reflection of a heart condition or do they reflect a normal adaptation to > exercise? Also, data indicate that the " normal " changes may be more > pronounced in some sports compared with others, making interpretation > increasingly difficult. > * There presently is no " gold standard " for evaluating ECGs, and it is not > uncommon for health care professionals in the United States to analyze the > same ECG and come away with different conclusions about the health of the > athlete. > * There is also the cost associated with conducting ECGs and any subsequent > more discriminating tests that will need to be conducted to verify the > results of a positive ECG. > > This is a lot to consider when making a decision about whether to include > an ECG as part of a PPE. On the one hand, you may feel that athlete's health > should trump all other decisions. But if you are requiring a test to be a > part of a PPE, you would also like that test to have 100% accuracy in > diagnosing underlying heart conditions. Taking these factors into account, > the American Heart Association has recommended that ECGs need not be a > mandatory part of a PPE screening for athletes. They cite the costs > associated with testing a large number of athletes, the number of false > positives (as well as the costs associated with further evaluating false > positives), the lack of randomized controlled studies to demonstrate the > superiority of the ECG over a traditional PPE, the lack of normative data in > youth and certain demographics, and the variability inherent to ECG > interpretation as the primary factors motivating their recommendation. > > ============ ========= > Carruthers > Wakefield, UK > > > > > > > I found this alos very interesting > > Ralph Giarnella MD > > Southington Ct USA > > > > ECG Cost-Effective for Screening Student Athletes > > By Crystal Phend, Senior Staff Writer, MedPage Today > > Published: November 16, 2009 > > Reviewed by Dori F. Zaleznik, MD; Associate Clinical Professor of > Medicine, Harvard Medical School, Boston and > > Dorothy Caputo, MA, RN, BC-ADM, CDE, Nurse Planner > > > > Action Points > > > > * Note that the American Heart Association and American College of > Cardiology guidelines suggest ECG as optional for preparticipation screening > of student athletes. > > > > > > * Note that this study was published as an abstract and presented at a > conference. These data and conclusions should be considered preliminary > until published in a peer-reviewed journal. > > > > ORLANDO -- Cost issues should no longer keep electrocardiograms out of > most schools' efforts to screen student athletes for potentially fatal heart > problems, researchers said here. > > > > Recent declines in the price of ECG machines mean that students can be > screened for a cost of less than $3 each after an initial investment of > under $500 per school, according to a study led by DeBauche, MD, of > Cypress Cardiology in Cypress, Texas. > > > > Addition of 12-lead ECG to screening would cost just $300 per year of > life saved, DeBauche's group reported at the American Heart Association > meeting. > > > > This price was so far below the typical cost-effectiveness threshold of > $50,000 per life-year that there should no longer be any question about > adopting ECG in screening, DeBauche said. > > > > His group set up a program to add a one-time ECG for every student > participating in competitive sports in their suburban Houston school > district. > > > > Although high school football is enormously popular in Texas where games > can draw tens of thousands of spectators, like most other states, Texas > requires only a perfunctory physical exam and completion of a questionnaire > on possible symptoms and family cardiac history for participation. > > > > ECG is universally acknowledged as more likely to identify serious > cardiac problems, and it has been adopted as an international standard for > screening in much of the world. > > > > One prior study from a region in Italy, which pioneered nationwide > screening of athletes with ECG in the late 1990s, revealed a 90% drop in > sudden cardiac events after the screening program began. (See National > Screening Slows Sudden Cardiac Deaths Among Athletes) > > > > But ECG has not been advocated in national guidelines for the U.S. in > large part because of the cost, Zipes, MD, of Indiana University and > a past president of the American College of Cardiology, noted. > > > > " The U.S. is behind the times when it comes to screening athletes, " he > said, calling current efforts in much of the country woefully inadequate. > > > > Scattered U.S. programs have adopted ECG following the Italian model. > " Everybody agrees, yes, it should be done, but it's optional because we > don't think we can afford, on a national level, a mandated program, " > DeBauche said. > > > > At current reimbursement levels, sending all student athletes to the > hospital or a physician's office for an ECG at about $100 each would cost > over an estimated $1 billion, DeBauche said. > > > > The program his group designed, though, would cost under $2 million to > screen all 200,000 U.S. athletes in the ninth grade, which is an optimal age > to catch problems -- before high school sports but after onset of puberty, > he said. > > > > The program included providing laptop-based ECG machines for each of 10 > high schools in the school district. > > > > Athletic trainers and other school employees were trained to apply the > ECG leads according to a diagram, take the ECG with the push of a button, > and forward the HIPAA compliant electronic file to DeBauche's team for > interpretation. > > > > Of the 2,057 freshmen screened, 9% (186 students) had an abnormal ECG > result and were advised to set up a consultation, get a screening > echocardiogram for diagnosis, or both. > > > > Only 0.6% had a serious enough abnormality to eliminate them from > participation in competitive sports. > > > > Among the 173 who accepted further examination for their abnormal > findings, the diagnoses included: > > > > * Eight cases of Wolff-Parkinson- White syndrome > > * 23 cases of left ventricular hypertrophy > > * Three cases of moderate severity mitral valve regurgitation > > * Six cases of right ventricular pulmonary hypertension > > * One case of cardiomyopathy > > * 17 cases of mitral valve prolapse. > > > > One student was found to have noncompaction cardiomyopathy, a clearly > life-threatening condition that subsequently led to implantation of a > defibrillator and waitlisting for a heart transplant. > > > > A second case of aortic coartication and the right ventricular > abnormalities " certainly had major clinical significance, " the researchers > said. > > > > An echocardiogram to follow-up on abnormal cases could be carried out by > commercial screening firms specializing in large numbers of relatively easy > studies and reimbursed by all major insurers, DeBauche said. > > > > The ECG itself would cost only $0.50 per ECG for electrodes and about > $2.00 for interpretation. > > > > " When you find something this good you should do it, " DeBauche said. > > > > Barry lin, PhD, of Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, Mich., > agreed that this type of screening wouldn't necessarily need a clinical > cardiologist since a nurse or other trained staff could administer the ECG. > > > > " It's a very simple test, " he said. > > > > The biggest costs involve setting up the infrastructure, Zipes added. > > > > " We're talking about the lives of youngsters, " he said. " If that were > your son or daughter, you would want it done. " > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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